I'm lost. Will you help me find... Olen eksynyt. Autatko minua löytämään ...
Can you speak slower? Voitko puhua hitaammin?
How much money is this? Kuinka paljon rahaa on?
Can you get me a doctor? Saatko minulle lääkäri?
How does this work? Miten tämä toimii?
Finnish Flag
2. Government:
Finland is a republic government. That means that the people have control over government.
Finland there is a president and a prime minister. They elect a president every six years, and the elected president picks the prime minister. Currently, the president is Tarja Halonen. Tarja Halonen is the first woman president in Finland. She was elected in 2000, and reelected in 2006. The current prime minister is Mari Kiviniemi. She is the second woman prime minister.
This is Tarja Halonen(left) and Mari Kiviniemi(right).
3. School System:
In Finland, the schooling system is a little different than ours. They offer free preschool, public or private. You must go to preschool for at least one year. Then, you go to primary school. After primary school, kids choose if they want to trade, as in you can cooking or something like that. If you don't choose to trade, you go to high school. When you go to college in Finland, it's free! Why is preschool and college free? Well, school is very important to Finns.
This is Abo Akademi. It's the sixth best college in Finland.
4. Tourism:
There are some good places to go to in Finland. One is Turku. People go to Turku because that was the capital of Finland until 1812. A good place to visit in Turku is the Turku Castle. Another place to visit in Finland is Lake Saimaa. People go there because it's just really cool and fun. People also like going to Yyteri Beach. It's a really good beach to go to in Finland. It's fun to go to Kuopio. A cool fact about Kuopio is it has 14 twin towns. Another fun place in Finland is the capital, Helsinki. Why? There's so much to do there!
Lake Saimaa
5. Transportation:
Finns have different ways to get to places. If you live in a big city like, Helsinki, you take the subway or the clean buses or trains. Each family throughout Finland owns one car. People like riding ferries across the waters. In the summertime, Finns ride their bikes so they stay healthy.
Finnish Car
6. Main Industries:
Finland has a couple main industries. One is electronics, and a big electronic company in Finland is Nokia. Another is metal, engineering, manufacturing, and others that fall in that category. About 400,000 people in Finland work in these kinds of companies. In the energy industries, the types of energy was divided into the supplied of how much Finland has, nuclear power - 26%, net imports - 20%, hydroelectric power - 16%, combined production district heat - 18%, combined production industry - 13%, condensing power - 6%. Additional industries include, the pulp and paper industry, and the chemical industry.
The Nokia Building.
7. Historical Events:
1100s AD- Sweden starts their first crusade in southwest Finland.
1323- Eastern Finland is split into Sweden and Russia.
1812- Helsinki becomes the capital. Before, the capital was Turku.
1917-Finland becomes its own country.
1995- Finland joins the European Union.
2002- The Finnish markka are replaced with the euro.
Finnish Markka
8. How to Get a Passport:
(online)
Go on to www.uspassport123.com.
Click New Passport if you're an adult, or Child Passport if you're a child.
Choose your price of your passport.
Then fill out your personal application.
Ta-da! Your finished!
If you can't access internet, you can go to the post office, or even the library.
Passport!
9. Clothing:
Most Finnish people are more on the fashionable side. The traditional female style is a skirt, shirt, and vest. The men usually wear pants, shirt, and vest, if they also dress traditional. Now, Finns wear trousers, skirts, scarfs, jackets, aprons, wool vests, cotton blouses, and a head pieces, usually headbands or hats. Finns wear warm clothes, since it's cold there.
Traditional Finnish Outfit
10. Food:
This will be your menu of your typical meals in Finland.
Breakfast:
Adults will just have coffee and tea. Kids have milk or hot chocolate. They usually have pancakes, which they make differently than us. Finns also make egg butter spread.
Lunch:
Finns like having a large dinner, so lunch can include salad, steamed veggies, or fish. You would only have one of the three.
Dinner:
They love to have potatoes, cheese, sausage, and fish. A favorite dinner is meatloaf with a lingonberry sauce.
Dessert:
Finnish dessert is different then what we have. They like to have berries like strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, or lingonberies.
Specialty:
For May Day, Finns have a drink called sima, which is made out of lemons, brown sugar, raisins, and yeast.
Sima
11. What to Bring:
Everyone:
You'll need to bring a coat. It's cold!
You'll need your passport.
It's a good idea to bring a Finnish to English translator book.
Facts Contents:
10 Useful Phrases
Government
School System
Tourism
Transportation
Main Industries
Historical Events
How to Get a Passport
Clothing
Food
What to Bring
What You Can't Find
Bibliography
1. 10 Useful Phrases:
Where's the bathroom? Missä vessa?
Do you have the time? Onko sinulla aikaa?
Can you help me? Voilteko auttaa minua?
Thank you. Kiitos.
Hello! How are you? Hei! Miten menee?
I'm lost. Will you help me find... Olen eksynyt. Autatko minua löytämään ...
Can you speak slower? Voitko puhua hitaammin?
How much money is this? Kuinka paljon rahaa on?
Can you get me a doctor? Saatko minulle lääkäri?
How does this work? Miten tämä toimii?
2. Government:
Finland is a republic government. That means that the people have control over government.
Finland there is a president and a prime minister. They elect a president every six years, and the elected president picks the prime minister. Currently, the president is Tarja Halonen. Tarja Halonen is the first woman president in Finland. She was elected in 2000, and reelected in 2006. The current prime minister is Mari Kiviniemi. She is the second woman prime minister.
3. School System:
In Finland, the schooling system is a little different than ours. They offer free preschool, public or private. You must go to preschool for at least one year. Then, you go to primary school. After primary school, kids choose if they want to trade, as in you can cooking or something like that. If you don't choose to trade, you go to high school. When you go to college in Finland, it's free! Why is preschool and college free? Well, school is very important to Finns.
4. Tourism:
There are some good places to go to in Finland. One is Turku. People go to Turku because that was the capital of Finland until 1812. A good place to visit in Turku is the Turku Castle. Another place to visit in Finland is Lake Saimaa. People go there because it's just really cool and fun. People also like going to Yyteri Beach. It's a really good beach to go to in Finland. It's fun to go to Kuopio. A cool fact about Kuopio is it has 14 twin towns. Another fun place in Finland is the capital, Helsinki. Why? There's so much to do there!
5. Transportation:
Finns have different ways to get to places. If you live in a big city like, Helsinki, you take the subway or the clean buses or trains. Each family throughout Finland owns one car. People like riding ferries across the waters. In the summertime, Finns ride their bikes so they stay healthy.
6. Main Industries:
Finland has a couple main industries. One is electronics, and a big electronic company in Finland is Nokia. Another is metal, engineering, manufacturing, and others that fall in that category. About 400,000 people in Finland work in these kinds of companies. In the energy industries, the types of energy was divided into the supplied of how much Finland has, nuclear power - 26%, net imports - 20%, hydroelectric power - 16%, combined production district heat - 18%, combined production industry - 13%, condensing power - 6%. Additional industries include, the pulp and paper industry, and the chemical industry.
7. Historical Events:
1100s AD- Sweden starts their first crusade in southwest Finland.
1323- Eastern Finland is split into Sweden and Russia.
1812- Helsinki becomes the capital. Before, the capital was Turku.
1917-Finland becomes its own country.
1995- Finland joins the European Union.
2002- The Finnish markka are replaced with the euro.
8. How to Get a Passport:
(online)
Go on to www.uspassport123.com.
Click New Passport if you're an adult, or Child Passport if you're a child.
Choose your price of your passport.
Then fill out your personal application.
Ta-da! Your finished!
If you can't access internet, you can go to the post office, or even the library.
9. Clothing:
Most Finnish people are more on the fashionable side. The traditional female style is a skirt, shirt, and vest. The men usually wear pants, shirt, and vest, if they also dress traditional. Now, Finns wear trousers, skirts, scarfs, jackets, aprons, wool vests, cotton blouses, and a head pieces, usually headbands or hats. Finns wear warm clothes, since it's cold there.
10. Food:
This will be your menu of your typical meals in Finland.
Breakfast:
Adults will just have coffee and tea. Kids have milk or hot chocolate. They usually have pancakes, which they make differently than us. Finns also make egg butter spread.
Lunch:
Finns like having a large dinner, so lunch can include salad, steamed veggies, or fish. You would only have one of the three.
Dinner:
They love to have potatoes, cheese, sausage, and fish. A favorite dinner is meatloaf with a lingonberry sauce.
Dessert:
Finnish dessert is different then what we have. They like to have berries like strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, or lingonberies.
Specialty:
For May Day, Finns have a drink called sima, which is made out of lemons, brown sugar, raisins, and yeast.
11. What to Bring:
Everyone:
You'll need to bring a coat. It's cold!
You'll need your passport.
It's a good idea to bring a Finnish to English translator book.
Bring walking shoes.
You need money, of course!
Warm clothing is good.
Movers:
Your furniture!
Credit Card to access all of your money.
Cooking supplies would be good.
Any others personal belongings.
12. What You Can't Find:
Hedgehogs as pets :..(
Donald Duck Comics
Warm Temperatures
King Kong Movies
A Camel
A Kangaroo
13. Bibliography
Works Cited
Cia Gov. N.p., n.d. Web. 4 Oct. 2010. <http://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/>.
Culture Grams. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Oct. 2010. <http://online.culturegrams.com/kids/kids_country.php?contid=5&wmn=Europe&cid=56&cn=Finland>.
“Finnish Breakfast Recipes.” Food. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Jan. 2011. <http://www.food.com/recipe-finder/finnish,breakfast>.
“Finnish Clothing.” Map of World. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Jan. 2011. <http://www.mapsofworld.com/finland/people-culture-festivals/clothing.html>.
kwinetessential. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Oct. 2010. <http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/global-etiquette/finland-country-profile.html>.
“A Very Finnish Lunch.” Pattern Bakery. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Jan. 2011. <http://patternbakery.blogspot.com/2009/08/very-finnish-lunch.html>.